When Medicine Met Morality: Four Cases That Defined a Week in Victorian Guernsey
15 March 2026

When Medicine Met Morality: Four Cases That Defined a Week in Victorian Guernsey

Guernsey Deep Dive

About

Step back into the autumn of 1898 as we uncover the forgotten archives of the Saint Peter Port Royal Court. From medical tragedies to international fugitives, this episode explores four distinct cases that gripped the island of Guernsey over a century ago.


In this episode, we discuss:


    The Tragedy at Woodland Place: The heartbreaking death of 33-year-old Mary Batiste. When a routine medical procedure involving chloroform goes wrong, the Queen’s Officers must determine if a crime was committed or if it was a tragic accident of the Victorian era.




    The South Esplanade Vagrant: The story of John Diamond, a man caught in a cycle of public intoxication and "vagrancy." We look at the harsh reality of 19th-century justice: ten days of imprisonment with hard labor.




    The Cost of No-Shows: Military discipline in the Royal Guernsey Militia. We examine why Alfred Martel and William Roberts were heavily fined at the Town Arsenal, including a staggering £3.3.0 penalty—a small fortune in 1898.




    The French Connection: An international manhunt ends in Guernsey. We follow the extradition case of Emile Auguste Mario and François Lereculey, two men accused of theft in the French Republic and brought before the Bailiff under the Extradition Act of 1870.




Join us as we peel back the layers of Guernsey’s legal history, one court record at a time.


All names and cases are factual